colchar wrote:Lavabe wrote:Forte vs. forte
A strength of mine is a forte (pronounced FORT); the latter term (pronounced FOR-tay) refers to a musical term for loudness.
Bugs me EVERY time I hear it mispronounced.
According to the OED the for-tay pronunciation does mean a strength.
Webster's New World disagrees with OED.
In OED, do they give it as an alternate acceptable pronunciation, or has it replaced completely the initial FORT pronunciation?
The derivation is Middle English "fort", and Old French "fort," then (if you use the English word "fort" as in fortification) derived from Latin FORTIS, Old Latin "forctus," then an IndoEuropean base of "bheregh-" and possibly Sanskrit "brmhati").
I don't have OED's description of how it gets to be allowed as for-tay.
The music term forte (pronounced for-tay) is derived from Italian first, and THEN the Latin "fortis." Strictly speaking, it means strong volume, LOUD. It isn't someone's strength. Right?
Clarification please? If I am wrong, I too hang my head in shame.
2014, 2011, and 2009 Lemur Loving CTN NASCAR Champ. No lasers were used to win these titles.